Friday, February 2 1, 1964—THE DETROIT J EWISH NEWS- 20

Gloria. Parzen Weds-
jay Allan Stevens

MRS. JAY STEVENS

In a double-ring ceremony
solemnized recently at Cong.
Shaarey Zedek, Gloria Marion
Parzen, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Parzen of Sorrento
Ave. was wed to J a y Allan
Stevens, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Stevens of Greenlawn
Ave. Rabbi Morris Adler, Rabbi
Herbert Parzen, uncle of the
bride, and Cantor Jacob Sonen-
klar officiated.
The bride wore a tradition-
al gown of ivory peau de soie.
A wateau chapel train fell
from the shoulders of the
fitted bodice appliqued in
pearls. Her cap of heirloom
lace and peau de soie rose
petals was attached to a pouf
veil of ivory silk illusion. She
carried trailing baby white
orchids on her Bible.
Mrs. Morris Silverman, the
bride's sister, was matron of
h ono r. Julie Silverman was
flower-girl. Susan Stevens, sis-
ter of the bridegroom, was
junior bridesmaid, and brides-
maids were Lois Bassin, Bar-
bara Parzen, Tamra Sweet and
Mrs. Gerald Weinberg.
Edward Cherniak was best
man. Ring bearer was Jeffrey
Silverman and Richard Bassin
was junior usher. Ushers were
Morris Silverman, Stephen
Dunn, Gerald Jaffe and Gerald
Weinberg.
Following a honeymoon in
Miami Beach, the couple will
live on Rensselaer Ave., Oak
Park.

ORT Michigan Region to Close

Membership Drive With Program

Michigan ORT Day, culmin-
ating the -annual membership
drive of the region, will be held
12:30 ,p.m. 1VIarch 4 at Cong.
S h a a r e y Zedek, announces
Pr esident Mrs. Nathan H.
Schlafer.
A program fashioned after
New York's Upstairs a t t h e
Downstairs Club well feature
radio, humorist Paul Winter, ac-
tress Liz Weiss and guitarist-
folk singer Ted Lucas in "Why
Must the Show Go On?" Lucas
and Winter will present a series
of songs, "The Cities of Michi-
gan in Song and. Verse," to-
gether with such numbers as a
caricature of the disc jockey
and teen-age dances and a light
touch on current events.
Other features of the pro-
gram, according to ORT Day
chairman Mrs. Harold Kukes,
will be a report from Mrs.
Irwin Kurtz on her recent
trip abroad as an ORT dele-
gate.
Membership vi c e president
Mrs. Irving Stoliman advises
that anyone joining ORT on
that day will be admitted at no

Group Arranges
`Cherub Ball' to
Aid Children

Infants Service Group will
holds its annual fund-raising
dinner-dance, "T he Cherub
Ball" at the Latin Quarter
March 1.

Entertainment h a s been
planned by Mrs. David Riseman,
and chairmen of the event, Mrs.
.
Gilbert Borenstein and Mrs.
Nathan Silvers have arranged
a 6 p.m. champagne hour to
precede t h e
dinner.
Under pres-
ident, Mrs.
Warren Green-
stone, Infants
Service Group
raises funds to
aid needy chil--
dren in many
areas. The De-
troit Associa-
tion f o r Re- Mrs. Greenstone
tarded Children and Penrick-
ton Nursery are among the
Music Club Students
agencies receiving assistance
to Hear Musicologist
Music Study Club, Student from the 30-year-old group.
For tickets, call ticket chair-
Group, will meet 8 p.m. today
at the home of Toby Kahn, men Mrs. Allen Fisher, UN 1-
8230, or Mrs. Merle Bronstein,
23815 Seneca, Oak Park.
Dr. Martin Herman, musicol- 342-1327.
ogist at Monteith College,
The group also has scheduled
Wayne State University, will a theater party for March 15
speak on "Perception of Music at the Fisher Theater. The play,
—Expectations and Realizations "Never Too Late" stars William
of Performers and Listener."
Bendix. For reservations, call
Music students between the Mrs. George Schwartz, VE G-
ages of 14-21 are invited to at- 1083, or Mrs. Harry Farber, LI
tend. ' 4-7541.

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Workmen's Circle Branch Will Celebrate
25th Anniversary With Dinner-Dance

.

charge, together with the mem-
ber who brings her. These new
members will be paid in full
until September 1965, and any
sponsor of five new "ORTists"
automatically joins the honor
roll roster.
Cha p t e r membership vice
presidents assisting in the drive
are Mesdames Marvin Rosen,
Betty Mahler, Benson Cummis,
Edgar Fenton, Robert Stone, Sol
Cohen, Fred Krainen, June
Rubenstein, Jane Lockoff, Irwin
Eisenfeld, Daniel Uzial and
Leon Simon.
Others working on arrange-
ments are Mesdames Erwin
Roth, Nathan Spector, James
Bittker, Vivian Ross, Sam
Frank, Harry Aranow, Arthur
Bloom, Daniel Siegel, Wil-
liam Bonin and Max Beal.
ORT, which stands for Organ-
i z a ti on f or Rehabilitation
Through Training, is a world-
wide system Of vocational
schools designed to rehabilitate
the underprivileged and raise
the economic and cultural level.
Women's American ORT helps
maintain the over 600 voca-
tional training centers, schools
and workshops in 22 countries.
Mrs. Schlafer will be inter-
viewed about ORT Day on the
Pat Morris television show (7)
10:15 a.m. Wednesday.

Workmen's Circle B r a n c h
460-E will celebrate its 25th
anniversary with a dinner-dance
Saturday evening at the Center.
Cocktails will be served at 6:30,
with dinner to follow. Music will
be provided by the Sam Barnett
Orchestra.
A program prepared by Frank
Newberg, arrangements commit-
tee, will feature a candle-light-
ing c e r emony involving the
charter members of the group.
Officers to be installed at this
time are Mrs. Leon Yelensky,
chairman; Norman Pikulin, vice
chairman; Eugene Brownstein,
recording secretary; Maurice

Honorary Consultant in the

Humanities.
Untermeyer was editor-in-
chief of the cultural publica-
tion of Decca Records, until re-
signing in 1955. He was senior
editor of publications and
writer of foreign radio broad-
casts with the Office of War
Information during Worald War
II.
He and his wife, Bryna Ivans,
fiction editor of Seventeen, live
in Newton, Conn.

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Mrs. Moe Caplan, president
of the Workmen's Circle Wo-
men's Division, announces the
27th annual donor luncheon is
scheduled for noon March 11
at the Workmen's Circle Cen-
ter.
Selections by the Don Froh-
man Chorus will be featured.
For reservations, call Mrs. Cap-
lan, LI 7-0218, or the Center
office, KE 7-5440.

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Plans Donor Luncheon

•

Poet Untermeyer
at WSU Feb. 27

L o u i s Untermeyer, noted
poet, editor critic and antholo-
gist will lecture on "The Writ-
ing and Reading of Poetry,"
at 8 p:m., Thursday, at the
Rackham Educational Memorial
Auditorium.
The program, open to the
public at no charge, is spon-
sored by Dr. John M. Dorsey,
the University Professor.
Untermeyer, who will be ac-
corded the title of Visiting
Professor for his one-day visit
to the university, has authored
more than 50 volumes, includ-
ing ,`A Treasury of Gr eat
Poems," "Selected Poems and
Parodies," "The Oxford Book
of English Verse" and "Modern
American and British Poetry,"
a standard text in many col-
leges.
Widely acclaimed for his
service to American letters
with the publication of "The
Letters of Robert Frost to
L o u i s Untermeyer," Unter-
meyer has provided an endur-
ing record of an intimate liter-
ary friendship which spanned
nearly 50 years.
"There are times," Frost once
said, "when I think I am merely
the figment of Louis' imagina-
tion."
In 1961, Untermeyer was ap-
pointed consultant in English
poetry to the Library of Con-
gress, where he now serves as

Goldsmith, financial secretary;
Mrs. Charles Ensink, correspond-
ing secretary; and Abraham
Brownston, treasurer.

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